The leader of the rebel coalition that swept to power in Syria over a week ago said that all armed groups in the country will be dissolved, Syrian state news media reported Tuesday, as the new government attempts to rebuild a functioning state.
Just over a week after President Bashar al-Assad’s fall, the new authorities in the Syrian capital, Damascus, have sought to present a sense of stability after almost 14 years of civil war. Ahmed al-Shara, the leader of the rebel coalition, said on Monday that rebel groups in the country would be disbanded and their fighters brought under the authority of the defense ministry, according to a statement posted on SANA, Syria’s state news agency.
“Everyone will be subject to the law,” he said.
It was not clear from Mr. al-Shara’s comments how or when this may be achieved, or whether the competing armed factions in the country would agree.
The United States and several other countries still consider Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the rebel group led by Mr. al-Shara, to be a terrorist organization. But Syria’s new leaders have been meeting with Western diplomats in a bid for international recognition of the government’s legitimacy.
The push to maintain law and order comes as Syria’s new government tries to get public institutions back up and running. Preparations are underway to reopen international airports, and Syria’s state news agency has been broadcasting administrative bulletins about central bank exchange rates and recruitment calls for the police.
The names of the students have not been made public. The family of the targeted student had said in a statement published on Friday in The Gettysburgian, the college newspaper, that their son became “the victim of a hate crime” when a teammate used a box cutter to etch a slur against Black people across their son’s chest at an informal swim team gathering on Sept. 6.
ImageThe Syrian central bank in Damascus on Monday.Credit...Ammar Awad/ReutersWe are having trouble retrieving the article content.
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